One-Woman Revolution Katherine Dunham.ALL ROADS All Roads is a 2001 interactive fiction game by Jon Ingold that placed first at the 2001 Interactive Fiction Competition. It also won the XYZZY Awards for Best Game, Best Setting and Best Story and was nominated for Best Individual Puzzle and Best Writing. lead to Katherine Dunham. Well, not all. But sometimes it seems to be so. Jazz dance, "fusion" and the search for our cultural heritage all have their antecedents in Dunham's work as a dancer, choreographer and anthropologist. She was the first American First American may refer to:
adj. Bestowed liberally: unstinting approval. un·stint ing·ly adv.Adv. for racial justice. She could have had her own TV show called Dance Roots. Dunham, 91, is in Manhattan, where she is working on an autobiography, Minefield, while undergoing physical therapy for her surgically replaced knees. Surrounded by former dancers, friends and a bright-eyed two-and-a-half-year-old goddaughter god·daugh·ter n. A female godchild. goddaughter Noun a female godchild Noun 1. , she regales them with stories, songs and warm-hearted joking. The young Katherine Dunham studied ballet with Mark Turbyfill of the Chicago Opera and the Russian dancer Ludmilla Speranzeva. When she was only 21, with Turbyfill's help, she formed the short-lived Ballet Negre. Soon after, she started the Katherine Dunham Dance Company, which was based in Chicago during the early years. Carmencita Romero, who danced with Dunham from 1933 to 1941, said the company performed a mix of cultures even then: "We did Russian folk dances with full skirts, Spanish dances influenced by La Argentinita La Argentinita is the stage name of a famous dancer born Encarnación López Julvez (March 3, 1898-September 24, 1945) in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Among her performances was as the Butterfly in the premiere of Federico García Lorca's El maleficio de la mariposa. and Carmen Amaya Carmen Amaya (November 2, 1913 - November 19, 1963) was a flamenco dancer and singer, born in the Somorrostro slum of Barcelona, Catalonia. She danced from the time she was 7 years old. In 1929, she made her debut in Paris, to warm acclaims and admiration of her dancing skill. , and plantation dances like Bre'r Rabbit an' de Tah Baby." In 1935, Dunham, under the aegis of a Rosenwald fellowship, traveled to the Caribbean to research African-based dances. She returned in 1936, having passed rigorous initiation rites to become a mambo--a vaudun priestess. She soon choreographed pieces that reflect Haitian movements, for instance, the yanvalou, in which the spine undulates like the snake god, Damballa. But more than that, she absorbed the idea of dance as religious ritual. She has said, "In vaudun we sacrifice to the gods, but the top sacrifice is dance." Shango (1945), which depicts such a sacrifice, hypnotized audiences during the Alvin Alley American Dance Theater's celebration of Dunham in 1987. Dunham also focused on American dance forms: "I was running around getting all these exotic things from the Caribbean and Africa when the real development lay in Harlem and black Americans," she says. "So I developed more things in jazz." Her revue, Le Jazz Hot (1940), included vernacular forms like the shimmy, black bottom, shorty short·y also short·ie Informal n. pl. short·ies 1. A person short in stature. 2. A thing of less than average size, length, extension, or duration. adj. george and the cakewalk. That same year, Dunham collaborated with George Balanchine Noun 1. George Balanchine - United States dancer and choreographer (born in Russia) noted for his abstract and formal works (1904-1983) Balanchine in choreographing the Broadway musical Cabin in the Sky Cabin in the Sky is an American Broadway musical which opened in 1940. A motion picture based on the musical was produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and released in 1943. . She recalls, "He took an Arab song and taught it to me for a belly dance." About their collaboration, she confesses, "He was a help, but I was pretty adamant about what I wanted to do. We had a wonderful time together." In 1943, the international impresario Sol Hurok Noun 1. Sol Hurok - United States impresario who was born in Russia (1888-1974) Hurok, Solomon Hurok presented Dunham's company in Tropical Revue at the Martin Beck Martin Beck is a fictional police detective who is the main character in a series of ten novels by Sjöwall and Wahlöö, collectively titled The Story of a Crime. The stories are often seen largely from his perspective, and hence are frequently referred to as the Martin Beck Theater on Broadway, adding Dixieland jazz musicians to boost its commercial appeal. The show became a hit, enjoying a six-week run, unusual for such a revue. Dunham was a glamorous performer, and it is rumored that Hurok had insured her legs for a million dollars. In an interview with biographer Ruth Beckford, Dunham demurred, saying the amount was a mere quarter million. Dunham opened a school in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of in 1945. Dana McBroom-Manno, who was a student there and later danced with Dunham, describes the Dunham technique as modern with an African base. "You use the floor as earth, the pelvis as center, holding torso and legs together. You work for fluidity, moving like a goddess, undulations like water, like the ocean. High leaps for the men. You elongate e·lon·gate tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates To make or grow longer. adj. or elongated 1. Made longer; extended. 2. Having more length than width; slender. the muscles, creating a hidden strength. We use both parallel and turned out, so it's easy to go from Dunham into any other technique. The isolations of the hips, fibs, shoulders that you see in all jazz classes were brought to us from the Caribbean by Miss Dunham. Also, she [talked about] Indian chakra points (in yoga, points of physical or spiritual energy in the body)." Romero, who has taught dance history at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center, emphasizes the spirited. "In Africa, all dance is based on animals, plants, the elements of the universe. The Dunham technique gives you a feeling of release and exhilaration by letting the body go." The Dunham school, in the Times Square area, thrived for ten years. Its thirty teachers offered classes in ballet, modern (Jose Limon was one of the modern teachers), "primitive," acting, martial arts and more. Among its students were James Dean, Arthur Mitchell, Butterfly McQueen and Doffs Duke. Donald Saddler, recently reminiscing, said Marlon Brando would come and play drams. Sometimes jazz bassist and composer Charles Mingus would come with a group of his musicians and play for classes. Out of the school came a student group, directed by the legendary Syvilla Fort, that included Julie Belafonte, Walter Nicks and Peter Gennaro. This group performed at schools and benefits. Belafonte--who met her husband, Harry, though one of these performances--recalls: "We were taught the rhythms of the movements with drums and with song in other languages; for instance, Portuguese and Haitian patois pat·ois n. pl. pat·ois 1. A regional dialect, especially one without a literary tradition. 2. a. A creole. b. Nonstandard speech. 3. The special jargon of a group; cant. . In class anyone could break into song at any time." The Dunham company was an incubator for many well-known performers, including Eartha Kitt, Talley Beatty, Janet Collins and Vanoye Aikens. In the 1940s and '50s, its heaviest touring years, the company visited an astounding a·stound tr.v. a·stound·ed, a·stound·ing, a·stounds To astonish and bewilder. See Synonyms at surprise. [From Middle English astoned, past participle of astonen, fifty-seven countries. Audience response was heady. Dr. Glory Van Scott, who danced with the company in 1959 and 1960, says, "Everywhere we went, audiences went crazy. In Paris, we'd do our show, and then we'd go dancing half the night at the Samba samba Ballroom dance of Brazilian origin, popularized in the U.S. and Europe in the 1940s. Danced to music in ⁴⁄₄ time with a syncopated rhythm, the dance is characterized by simple forward and backward steps and tilting, rocking body movements. Club. The audience loved us so much, they would follow us there. It was unreal." But the company encountered racism at home, and Dunham responded with defiance. In 1944, while touring in segregated Lexington, Kentucky, she found a "For Blacks Only" sign on a bus and pinned it to her dress onstage. Afterwards, she declared to the audience that she wouldn't come back to a place that forbade blacks to sit next to whites. In Dunham's Southland (1951), an impassioned response to the lynchings of Southern blacks, Julie Belafonte played a white woman whose false accusation of rape leads to a black man's murder. "It was very, very difficult for me," Belafonte recalls. "I had to transpose trans·pose v. To transfer one tissue, organ, or part to the place of another. my hatred of the character ... it was an acting problem. I had to overcome it in myself." Audience reaction was strong. Says Belafonte, "Everyone in the audience cried when we did it." The company premiered Southland in Santiago, Chile, despite warnings from the State Department, which wanted U.S. cultural exports to project only positive images. Possibly as a result, Dunham did not win support from the department, which funded tours by Martha Graham, Jose Limon and Paul Taylor. (In the days before the National Endowment for the Arts National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Independent agency of the U.S. government that supports the creation, dissemination, and performance of the arts. It was created by the U.S. , this was the only program that sponsored international dance touring.) But another possible reason is that the State Department's dance panel called her work "torrid." Dunham has lived her credo that "all artists are humanists." Her home in Haiti, Habitation HABITATION, civil law. It was the right of a person to live in the house of another without prejudice to the property. 2. It differed from a usufruct in this, that the usufructuary might have applied the house to any purpose, as, a store or manufactory; whereas Leclerc, served as a medical clinic--as well as a tourist attraction, with its nightly drumming and dancing--for many years. Having given injections of vitamin B vitamin B n. 1. Vitamin B complex. 2. A member of the vitamin B complex, especially thiamine. vitamin B, vitamin B complex a group of water-soluble substances described separately. and penicillin to ailing dancers, she administered first aid for parasites and joint diseases. Once a week, local doctors helped her to diagnose and treat patients in exchange for the medications that she could get them from New York. Dunham moved to East St. Louis, Illinois East St. Louis is a city located in St. Clair County, Illinois, USA, directly across the Mississippi River from St. Louis, Missouri. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 31,542. , during the racial troubles of the 1960s. Despite death threats and bomb scares, she helped a gang of black youths by giving them classes in martial arts, drumming and dance. During that period, the police were picking up young black men as a matter of course. On one occasion, Dunham railed against this racial profiling The consideration of race, ethnicity, or national origin by an officer of the law in deciding when and how to intervene in an enforcement capacity. Police officers often profile certain types of individuals who are more likely to perpetrate crimes. , getting herself thrown in jail. While in her 80s, she made national headlines by going on a hunger strike to protest the U.S. government's policy of returning Haitian refugees to face starvation and repression in their native land. She was supported in this effort by comedian Dick Gregory, filmmaker Jonathan Demme and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, along with hundreds of other Americans. It was only at the coaxing of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the deposed and later reinstated president of Haiti The President of Haiti is the head of state of the Republic of Haiti. Presidents are elected by popular vote to five-year terms and may serve no more than two terms. Each term begins and ends on the first February 7 after presidential elections are held. , that she ended her fast after forty-seven days. Asked about her courageous stand, Dunham says simply, "You can't learn or acquire these things; I think they're just put in you from the beginning." She is very happy about the Dunham Institute, to be held in August (see sidebar). She feels it is an extension of her destiny to teach--"My guiding voices tell me I should teach, and that's what I've been doing my entire life." The Dunham technique is being taught all over the country. McBroom-Manno, who has taught Dunham technique at Adelphi University, the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center, and now at the Ninety-Second Street Y DanceCenter in New York, says, "I teach Dunham technique as a way of life. Nutrition, African-based religions and social conscience are all part of it." Walter Nicks and Romero, who has taught dance history at the Ailey center, keep the Dunham technique alive in Europe, while McBroom-Manno passes it along in the United States. "Everybody is an anthropologist," Dunham says. "My objective is to see that different cultures get to know each other." McBroom-Manno relates how, as a scholarship student getting free lunch at the school, she was required to learn the traditional Japanese tea ceremony The Japanese tea ceremony (茶道, chadō, or sadō, or chanoyu - "the way of tea") is a traditional ritual based on Taoism (Daoism) and influenced by Zen Buddhism in which powdered green tea, or . "We would be squirming and carrying on, but she wanted us to learn the serenity and silence of that tradition." In preparing for Aida (1963), McBroom-Manno and the rest of the cast, dancers from both Dunham's group and the Metropolitan Opera ballet company, studied karate at the Dunham school to perfect a processional before the African king. Her influence is global. She helped to train the Senegalese National Ballet, and her performances inspired the start of many national groups, such as Ballet Folklorico de Mexico Ballet Folklorico de Mexico is a folkloric ballet ensemble in Mexico City. For five decades it has presented dances in costumes that reflect the traditional culture of Mexico. The ensemble has appeared under the name, Ballet Folklorico de Mexico de Amalia Hernandez. . Her numerous awards include the Dance Magazine Award in 1968, the Kennedy Center Honors The Kennedy Center Honors are held to be the highlight event in the cultural life of the United States. The idea was the brainchild of George Stevens, Jr. (who remains involved), and he and his partner, the late Nick Vanoff, put together the first event, launching it in 1978. , the American Dance Festival The American Dance Festival is a six-week summer festival of modern dance performances, and a school for dance currently held at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. Scripps Award, the Albert Schweitzer Award and, just this spring, the Duke Ellington Award. She is still concerned about Haiti. During a May 25 interview, she was gratified grat·i·fy tr.v. grat·i·fied, grat·i·fy·ing, grat·i·fies 1. To please or satisfy: His achievement gratified his father. See Synonyms at please. 2. to hear that very day that Haiti had held free elections without incident. But her thoughts linger on the art of dance. "Dance has been the stepchild step·child n. 1. A child of one's spouse by a previous union. 2. Something that does not receive appropriate care, respect, or attention: "Demography has a reputation for being the stepchild of . . . of the arts for a long time. I think now it's time for it to take its place among the other arts." It is also time for Katherine Dunham to be honored as one of the great innovators in the field of dance and one of the great humanitarian artists in history. RELATED ARTICLE: Instituting Dunham BY K.C. PATRICK FOR SEVENTEEN summers, Katherine Dunham has conducted an institute in St. Louis, Missouri (across from East St. Louis, Illinois, where she has a home), to teach the Dunham technique to eager dancers. This year, though, when Jannas Zalesky learned that Dunham would be in New York for an extended stay, she conceived the idea of sponsoring a Dunham Institute at City Center August 12-18. Zalesky is head of City Center's Outreach Education Department, which arranges training and resources for dance educators and artists teaching in New York's enormous school system. Directed by Judith Dakin, City Center is not only an award-winning performance venue and home to major professional dance companies but also a major player in linking schoolchildren schoolchildren school npl → écoliers mpl; (at secondary school) → collégiens mpl; lycéens mpl schoolchildren school to the arts, providing arts training to their teachers, and engaging professional artists to share their expertise in schools. City Center also works closely with agencies such as Career Transitions for Dancers. The Dunham Institute is perhaps the grandest program the Outreach Education Department has attempted. It is intended not only to encourage celebrating Dunham and her contributions to dance and society during the 2000-2001 school year, but also to use her holistic approach holistic approach A term used in alternative health for a philosophical approach to health care, in which the entire Pt is evaluated and treated. See Alternative medicine, Holistic medicine. to dance as a model for dance education in public schools as well as in the dance community at large. As a social scientist, Dunham explored such questions as what motivates a people to dance or express themselves in movement; her dance technique evolved to embrace the cultural context of each society that produced it. Her dancers learned more than movement techniques; they were encouraged to explore and understand humanity's similarities, rather than its differences. "Her technique and philosophy are universal," says Dr. Glory Van Scott, a scholar and former Dunham dancer. "Teachers need to get hold of her global vision. More than dance, she's life. She demanded that you do something with your life. When you take a page from her life and attach it to your own, then you do more than you thought you could." All sessions at the Dunham Institute are to be presented by nationally recognized experts on the dances of the African diaspora, including several former Dunham company dancers. The teaching roster includes Scott, VeVe Clark, Walter Nicks. Julio Jean, Brenda Dixon Gottschild, Joe Nash, Gil Noble. E. Gaynell Sherrod, Jeanelle Stovall, Mor Thiam and Jawole Willa Jo Zollar. Surprise guests and drop-ins are likely to visit the sessions. Dunham Institutes are always a reunion of sorts Classes in Dunham technique and Haitian dance and AfroCaribbean music and instrumentation require daily participation. Panel presentations and seminars that took at Dunham's work in a larger social, political and historical context are scheduled throughout the week. As is her custom, Dunham will conduct an evening conversation. A performance finale will showcase new dance works that have been created in the spirit of her life work. Materials developed for and out of the Institute will be made available on the New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. Board of Education Project ARTS Web site, http://www.nycenet.edu/projectarts/ "With our historic and ongoing connections to the dance community, City Center is both delighted and honored to take a leadership role in celebrating Ms. Dunham's career and work with this momentous project," Zalesky said. |
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